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Captain of Mercy: The Untold Cost of Saving Lives at Sea. A rescue ship captain's memoir of saving thousands, defying governments, and the moral storms that followed

Par : Mark Carl
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  • Nombre de pages230
  • FormatePub
  • ISBN978-3-565-13426-7
  • EAN9783565134267
  • Date de parution18/12/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Taille335 Ko
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurEmphaloz Publishing House

Résumé

In the dead of night, a rubber dinghy carrying forty-three people begins to sink. The nearest coast guard orders you to stand down. International law says you must intervene. Your crew's safety, your organization's survival, and your own freedom hang in the balance. Welcome to the Mediterranean, where rescue is political. This is the unflinching memoir of a captain who navigated more than treacherous waters-he navigated impossible choices.
Over five years and twenty-seven rescue missions, he pulled 3, 400 souls from the sea, each operation a collision between humanitarian duty and geopolitical reality. The Italian government threatened prosecution. Far-right militias shadowed his ship. European policymakers debated whether saving lives constitutes a crime. But beyond the headlines lies a deeper story: the psychological toll of choosing who lives when you cannot save everyone, the burnout of witnessing systemic indifference, and the moral injury of being labeled a criminal for acting on conscience.
Through visceral rescue scenes and quiet moments of doubt, the narrator exposes how bureaucracy becomes a weapon, how compassion becomes controversial, and how neutrality is a luxury the dying cannot afford. This memoir doesn't just document a crisis-it interrogates what it means to be human when laws and ethics collide. For humanitarian workers, maritime professionals, policy advocates, and anyone questioning their own capacity for courage, this narrative offers a frontline perspective on the cost of doing what's right when everything is at stake.